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Chicago examiner vol vi no 291 a m wednesday november 25 1908.-v-!4 pages price one cent ttbh tokio agitated by exainer's report of the kaiser's interview absorbing topic of the peo ple but officials all dep recate threats full accord with u s government organs say next few days events wiil show the emperor wrong archbishop ireland seen great prelate astonished by veiled attack on him can t speak officially tokio nov 24.â€”the Chicago exam in-jr's published interview with emperor im is the most absorbing topic of the day here officials as well as the news papers beliere the emperor has been cor rectly qnoted but the newspapers ridicule i his statements one paper publishes a picture of the german emperor having his tongue am putated and editorially discredits the state ment attributed to him that he and presi dent roosevelt bave agreed to oppose all the newspapers inspired by th op position insist that the relations be tween america and japan especially re garding china and also the open door are exceptionally friendly and that harmony is it is intimated by official organs that de velopments daring the neit few days wil prove that the cnited states and japan are fully agreed in regard to china ia spite of emperor william's statement that be president roosevelt are ln entire ac 'â– ireland wrought up but refuses comment on kaiser ind new tork nov 24.â€”archbishop tre nd to whom strong reference was made i the authentic report of the kaiser's interview -- published exclusively ln to liy's Chicago examiner arrived in this ty to-day en route from st paul minn i visit the pope at the vatican in rome one of the first things the archbishop d when he arrived at the murray hill otel where he wiil stay until he sails hursday on la provence with bishop scanlon of omaha was to buy a copy of the Chicago examiner containing the text of the imperial kaiser interview in which reference was made to him as follows the emperor declared that archbishop r_d is one of the worst enemies amer ica bas he is lireraliy a jesuit watch out for ireland he made a victim of Taft at rome prelate is wrought l'p that the archbishop was very much wrought up upon reading that part of the interview which referred to him was shown by the manner in which be read it aloud to lisbop scanlon in the lobby of the hotel ipeating each word distinctly with the copy of the examiner in his md the archbishop stood deeply en ossed for a few moments glancing over ie dispatches in which the vatican con rmed the text of the kaiser interview iblished in substance by the examiner the moment his eyes lighted on that por on of the text in which reference was ade to him he called bishop scanlon to s side listen to this bishop he exclaimed hen he read the text alond a reporter r the examiner asked for the arch shop's views what could i say asked the arch shop believe me i could say nothing i did not hear of my name being men tioned in the interview until i arrived here to-day a friend whom i met told me that it was published in the examiner i will take it to my room and read it over carefully declines to comment ithe archbishop accompanied by bishop anion then went to his room where he mid read over the dispatches relating to e kaiser interview ln quiet he re ined shortly afterward and seemed very nch impressed with the gravity of the legations as regards the holy see as to the kaiser's reference to him he id this to say although he wished it iderstood that he was making no cem ent upon the interview i do not wish to make any comment on lis at least not until i have given it ep thought the archbishop then left the hotel to ly his respects to archbishop farley the rchbishop will go directly to rome where _ will remain a guest at the vatican for vera weeks germans and austrians predict trouble for kaiser london nov 24 berlin dispatches bring the information that the rheinsch westfeulicbe zeitung commenting on the examiner interview says | despite hale's denial there must be mnch truth in it as we learn the english papers were acquainted witb the particu i lars the whole story would cause a great i ptir and like hydra to hercules will bring i mill further trouble to the berlin govern ,.[ ment j vienna wires that the zeit says i * a fearless and great newspaper such as â€¢ i the examiner wouldn't lie it is certain i the examiner correspondent succeeded in 3 getting a copy of the interview the words are ridiculous and child â– lih ' admiral's nephew and widow held as slayer harry sampson who was killed in the home of his mother-in-law near rochester n y and his widow who is charged with the shooting mrs sampson held as slayer of her husband the admiral's nephew charged with shooting young man to death in her mother's home following quarrel rochester n y xov 24 georgia allyn sampson widow of harry sampson a nephew of admiral sampson who was shot to death november 1 was arrested and charged with murder ta the first de gree at the close ot tie inquest at mace don to-day harry sampson was slain on the morn ing of november 1 on the farm of his wife's parents three miles from macedon i mrs frank p allyn mother of mrs i sampson lies critically ill at the allyn ' home which is barred to all outsiders the inqnest failed to reveal the name of the author of the mysterious letter that prompted the family quarrel which pre i ceded the tragedy the letter was de | stroyed and all that has come to light of its contents ts mrs aliyn's statement that she read it and that it was not proper for any woman to receive nor proper to retain this led ber she says to destroy the letter an hour after the shooting the finding of this letter in mrs samp son's possession en the previous saturday j by her hnsban-i caused the early morning quarrel just prior to his death | on the morning of his death sampson i ! and his wife had been in the sitting room ' of the allyn home in the kitchen was | mrs allyn following the report of a rifle mrs allyn opened the kitchen door and sampson fell dead at her feet then mrs | sampson rushed down a flight of stairs which leads from the sitting room the i rifle stood against a wall of the sitting j room the suicide theory received its greatest set-back when eir hamilton testified that it would have been impossible for samp son to have shot himself with a rifle â– **""" ' whisky samples fall into hands of children samples of liquor were distributed lib 'â– , erally through englewood yesterday and i several of the small bottles fell into tie i | bands of school children who drank the , whisky one little girl is said to bav<e , been found drunk in an alley tlie en , glewood police refused to give her came tbey say tbey bave the names of other , children who became typsy in school from ' drinking the samples and that if tbey find tbey can do it lawfully they will ar i j rest the distributors raid poker game at Illinois a c detectives make eight arrests in the michigan avenue clubhouse ! visit follows election members celebrating choice of successor to busse's friend when police arrive eight men presumably members of the new Illinois athieri cir.h and a'.l appar ently men of position and wealth were arrested in room s2s of the clnhhouse in michigan avenue at 11 o'clock last night for gambling they were playing poker fonr detectives from inspector luvtn's office egan sheehan murphy and carlan made the raid and it is a raid which stands without precedent in the city of Chicago never before have bona tide t_w members in their own clubrooms been in i terfered with by the police the raid came just after the result of the annual election of officers had been announced in tbis election william hale thompson the form*x president was sup planted by r hail mecormick who has been an antagonist of the club administra tion mr thompson was one of the found ers of the club he is also known as the original busse man ' offered post by mayor i before mayor busse really had a chance to be mayor mr thompson organized busse clubs and held mass meetings in ms interes't the mayor was extremely i grateful for his services and offered him the post of commissioner of public works but he declined it he ls now one of the mayor's closest friends he was not nomi nated for the club presidency while the members were celebrating the election of mecormick the four detectives arrayed in snch shining raiment as few de tectives have ever worn passed the door keeper jauntily and without once shying at the unusual expanse of their shirt fronts got into the elevator they seemed to know exactly where they wanted to go and how ittm were to act to void snsplcion r ninth floor said sheehan as the ele vator started upwards three knocks bring i_r when they had been set off at the ninth floor the fonr men sauntered along the cor ridor looking at the numbers until they came to 925 egan gave three knocks â€” evi dently the regular signal that the players knew for the door was opened qniekiy bat carefully before explanations could be demanded all four of the det*tives had crowded into the room and the eight men gathered aronnd one large green-covered j table were under arrest it was a regularly fltted up poker room i said sheehan afterward there were two tables each made to accommodate eight players only one of them was in use but we got 400 chips and six decks of cards they were playing for high stakes when we interrupted them the prisoners were paralyzed for a mo ment with surprise and chagrin meekly they followed the detectives downstairs snd got their hats and coat3 out of the checkroom when egan started out to ring for a patrol wagon they begged to be allowed to walk and the request was granted all say they are grocers at the harrison street station tbey all j said they were grocers or clerks and all i gave names which they appeared to have i difficulty in remembering before rhe po | lice could put them into cells alderman : kenna appeared in the role f the rich ! gamblers friend he-furnished 300 ball i for each man guaranteeing the appear j ance of all the grocers and clerks at a hearing this morning when the news of the gambling raid got ' about the club its members were properly . scandalized this is only one of many | troubles the club has had recently on j november 17 two of the officers were ar j rested for conducting a boxing bout in tion of the orders of chief shippy some time before that one of its mem | bers â€” t w brown went into court and asked tbat the board of trustees be com j pelled to open to him and his friends the , books of the club he asserted that there were disquieting rumors about the club to the effect that t resources were being badly handled and that certain trustees were giving themselves large contracts to the detriment of the club's finances if a disaffected member informed the po lice last night they refuse to tell who it was we made the raid because we knew gambling was going on there and because ! chief shippy haa ordered that all gam i bllng in Chicago must stop even though that gambling may be in respectable clubs or respectable private houses said one lof the raiders the reformers want all ! gambling stopped and they're getting it lid a tighter fit than Chicago ever has known j a seeming miracle has been wrought in i chicago's world of chance by the stopping jof all gambling games veterans of hnn j dreds of gambling wars like johnny rogers pat o'malley tom mcglnnis | john f o'malley and james o'leary have | heeded the stop order of the police and yesterday probably for the first time in | the history of Chicago there was not even i a solitary handbook in operation even the south Chicago gambling houses | were closed as a result of the exposures of their operations in yesterday's exam iner as a result the big king-pin gamblers of Chicago are in a panic they say that tbey see no ray of light ahead and that told to sign name loses her husband i col s c mccune forced queer separation contract says wife i widow figures in case i elopement with 70-year-old manager of the choate estates is hinted . colonel s c j[cc:-ie seventy verr old . a pill bfcj uihii elder wealrbr and manager , of the uoate estates and ul wife elenor have eparited under one of the strangest contracts ever drawn mccune with his danghter lucy is now i in lamar mo and lira mr-cune crippled | i and almost helpless has foond a haven 1 1 with friends ou the south side â– resident in the neighborhood of .*>.*>â€¢'â– â€¢"> i halsted street where nntil two weeks ago . the lli'.'f 11 lived say that mccune's be havior is traceable to a young widow who â€¢ lived in garfield boulevard and who now i is missing , mrs mecaue who was married to colonel . m oiae in 1000 declared her h7._n.-jnd ! : drove her from their home and forced her . to sign a contract of separation she says the widow was the cause the contract , ' agreement she say was that jlccune i should give his wife 000 tn cash j3 week ly for ber support and the household fur nitnre in return she agreed never to ! reside again in the boulevard block of i which he has charge \ resigns from church office the affair caused a great sensation in the big apartment buildings belonging to i the choate estate and an uprising among the tenants and neighbors so strong was the pressure that steps were taken to drive _ mccune ont of the garfield boulevard pres byterian church in which he was an elder what action was taken is not known but yesterday the rev b keene ryan pastor of the church admitted that [ mccnne had resigned further he de ' clined to discuss the matter the woman in the case is a pretty young milliner formerly employed in a department store according to mccune's friends she met the colonel several months ago she left the store and her apart ments in garfield boulevard about the , time sfe-cnne left his wife jiked cir who took poison the separation of the mccunes is the sequel to another extraordinary incident on christmas eve 1000 elsie m free man 51 carpenter street drank ehloro , form with snicidal intent tn lincoln park i because mccune had jilted her to marry elenor elsele the girl had written a pathetic note charging mccune with murdering her by marrying another woman last night the woman who won him : then was found at the home of friends on : the south side she said we had been married only a week i when the freeman girl started our trouble he had two children then by a former marriage â€” little girls then they are now ' | mrs myrtle mccomb and lucy who is i i eighteen years old â– \ we were happy i raised the girls 1 1 and took good care of them we got â– â€¢ i along until a few weeks ago and then i j that widow came into his life two weeks i ago â€” on november lo he came home and j i said there has been a whole lot of talk j j about me and this woman she is going ito get ont of the neighborhood and you j must go too i told him i didn't want to get ont and he said you've got to get a divorce i i still loves her husband 1 i didn't want any divorce then he brought home some papers and told me to 1 take them to a lawyer he insisted that i ; sign them they were drawn by attorney ' g a gary and were signed in clayton d eulette's office i didn't want to sign them for i still love my husband he said i must sign them or i shouldn't have a cent and i signed he gave me $.â– *Â» and some furniture and i get 3 a week that was all he would give he didn't have a dollar when i married him â– * i stuck to him and worked and now that ' he has money and i am lame and helpless i he leaves me i love him and i know that ' some day he will come back to me in the neighborhood it was reported that : j mccune and the widow are ia kansas city i i but his relatives said he was visiting a 1 stepbrother a t mcadow at lamar mo mrs myrtle â– mccomb his daughter is ill * and under a physician's care because of the 1 affair buys art institute lion from confidence men j german learns trick when he tries to take ornament away two conscienceless men swindled otto i schleriotb 44 schilier street halle al sace-lorraine germany out of $â€¢**) yester ! day by selling him one of the bronie lions on the portico of the art institute and failing to deliver it schierioth was ad i miring the lion when the strangers ap i proached and offered to sell it for tho he clinched the bargain eagerly but when he drove up to the institute with a two-horse wagon and a block and tackle to lift the lion down the art institute people wouldn't let him have it it was a miserable cheat said herr schierioth in reporting the matter to the Chicago avenne police just before starting back to germany if yon find chose men i wish you would make them return my money or deliver the lion f o b to halle archbold 5 defense of standard oil rebates wwere no atti i tude question i other large ship i per indeed every other large i every other consider i able states i the people who have made i outcry done for unfair i there has no reason for i man who freight i he could i go to the railroads and i bargain among them price i should be transported i to say the popular i understanding any rate i or you may i as to the i the shipper i when a manufac i a rebate i from the immediate i ly made the cost i and the consumer it i was a reduction got the benefit of it i state that as a rule that applied to my knowledge of the business in those days â€” john d aechbold on witness stand john d archbold lynch 3 as troops are rushed to jail tennessee mob hangs negroes to avenge death of dep uty sheriff tiptonville tenn nov 24 11ir1.v six weeks after the attention of tile nation had been directed to itm lawlessness in this section when captain queatin rankin was taken out and hanged by rhe night riders came the startling culmination to-day to the shooting sunday of d^rnfy sheriffs ( burrus end hall by marshall ed-ward and ! james stineback negroes when after tiie three men had been given a trial and con demned to death within a few hours after capture they were snatched from the of ficers in the courtroom nished to the edge of the town strung np an.l their bodies riddled with bullets notwithstanding the dramatic features surronndlng the lynching it was carried out in the most cold-blooded and systematic manner imaginable the negroes who had been concealing themseives in the fastnesses of an almost impenetrable canebrake near here were not captured until this morning when | they came out to secure food to pre 1 vent expected violence they were rushed | to jail the news of the capture spread rapidly and soon a mob from the surround ing country had assembled hold quick trial j fearing violence sheriff haynes com i municated with governor patterson at \ j nashville and asked that a ompany ofi i the troops who have been on duty at ! i cimip nemo ever since the rankin tragedy : ibe rushed here governor patterson or 1 dered the soldiers out and they are now marching across country to this place many of the leading citizens in view of all that has happened in the last few months appealed tearfully to the mob to ' allow the law to take its course but they i were hooted at and one speaker pulled ' ; from a box upon which be was speaking justice lee dnvis was appealed to and he opened court iate this afternoon think â– ing a hasty ttial of the negros might ap 1 pease the anger of the mob a jury was : ! secured the evidence heard and verdict ot â– guilty rendered within hardly more than ! an hour's time the negroes were con 1 demned to death lynched in street officers of the . court took the prisoners in charge and started for the jail as they ; reached the door of the courtroom there was a scuffle and before the officers real-i ized it the prisoners were taken from them | the mob then rushed the negroes down the street about â€¢*-*Â»â€¢ yards and strung theoi p volley after volley was fired into their bodies which were left hanging there all night want field museum moved to garfield park committee of west park commission ers will request change overtures are to be made to the trustees of the marshall field estate in the near future by a committee of the west park i commissioners in an effort to induce the j trustees to have the field columbian mu seum removed to one of the west side ! parks tn all probability garfield park if j the plans of the committee are successful the museum it was declared will event 1 uallj be located in the most central part of the city the decision was reached after the regular weekly meeting of the l>oard yesterday the motion was made by commissioner joseph a o'donneil and was unanimously approved by the seven members of the board kemp verdict due to-day the verdict in the hearing against the kev robert morris kemp wiil be banded to bishop charles p anderson aad made public to-day dr kemp was tried by a commission of two clergymen aad one layman on charges of misconduct made by choir boys of st chrysoatom's episcopal cburch of which im waa rector \ official tax rates for year 1908 are issued following is the table of tax rates for 1908 for Chicago divided into its towns : as officially announced by county clerk joseph haas yesterday 100-mile bicycle test for admirals but they can waik fifty miles or ride ninety if they prefer washington sor tr new berry assistant secretary of the navy as aske.i by the president has made up ten tatively the plans for the walking and riding tests of officers of the line and tag ashore and u-.-.ai mnch surprise was expressed to-day when â– the data was obtained and it was seen that i there would be no swimming exercises it was explained by some officers tbat any man in the nary would have to take the consequences if he did not know how to swim in case he fell overboat admiral dewey will be exem such rear admirals as dr p m rixey who are of the staff and not of the line al line officers from admirals down and staff officers from captains down will have to do these things walk fifty mile in three d or ride ninety miles in three ts or ride the bicycle 100 miles in th_e days au of this is of course on land at sen watch officers wiil have to stand watch for seventy-two hours captains and navigators of vessels will have to stand on continuous duty for twen ty-four hours on the b - other details are yet to be arranged pullman conductor held for smuggling j f yanner charged with operating â– at el paso tex j f yanner a pullman ear conductor employed on the Illinois central railway was arrested yesterday by special opera tive charles everstein of the government secret service on a charge of aiding and abetting the smuggling of chinamen into the united states from mea ss the border at el paso tex yanner is sus pected of aiding two chinamen to reach chieago he was arraigned before com missioner foote and in default of a bond he was taken to the county jail yanner recently was arrested on a similar barge at kansas city but was dismissed china wants roosevelt to remodel empire special cable to ths examiner tokio japan nov 2 the japan ad vertiser gives the most prominent publicity to the rumor emanating from pekln that one of the principal objects of tang shao vi's mission to the cnited states is the endeavor to indnce president roosevelt to act as confidential adviser to china during the process of remodeling the government on constitutional lines carnegie 71 years old to-day says he's young new york xov 21 seventy-one years old to-morrow is andrew carnegie and he told his friends v,-ho sent him greetings i night that he felt younger and ha-ppier 1 than at any time since he qnit hm _â– ____ j his optimistic feelings may be jndged f n>ni i his answer to the inquiry as to bow he re g-utded financial conditions ar present in this country the reply was this all's well rebates are a blessing archbold swears standard oil shared in rivals profits through draw from the railroads is proud of his re declares he sought and fought for bargains in transportation business john d ends testimony rockefeller forced to tell of contract made to restrai an independent new york nov 24 with _ sigh of relief john d rocke feller this afternoon gave up i the witness chair in the go^rnment'a suit for the dissolution of the standard oil trust he was not out of the room before in pepped john d archbold â€” known as the little king officially regis tered as first president and snoÃŸ cially since the campaign as responding secretary â€” _. rea.l and willing sacrifice for the defens the oil octopus for five days the riches car . the world has been testifyi -- - hope that the united states gout will not order his marvelous men torn to pieces part of the time he was in the hands of frank b k zg chief surgeon of the feder and all the rockefeller weal not pr3vent much vicious probing the ordeal has told on mr jc__.e feller more than he would admit and he was barely able to finish his ex amination archbold loob belligerent there was something belligerent about th general air of lieutenant archbold he bonnded down in his chair and while await ing the first question his eyes danced about the room never resting a moment he ciai-ed at mr kellogg at his own attor neys at the small army of reporters im partially his jaw was set in defiance to ' every one the better part of mr rockefeller's last â– morning on the stand was given over to ' a spirited attack on his veracity in con ; nection with an affidavit made in ebo in this affidavit mr rockefeller swore that the standard oil company of ohio did no o*wn or control certain refineries mr keilogg trotted out the secret trust agreement of is7o which gave the oil trust a new birthday and added three years to its age the refiners which mr rocke feller had denied in ar affidavit a year later were plainly included in the trust a-rreement mr rockefeller used al the known first aids to the wounded corporation witness j he forgot he could not remember he did i not recollect his attention had not been called to it thns did he dodge the sar castic and accusing shafts of the white haired man from st paul he finally declared that the facts in his : affidavit were literally true n*or would ! be admit that even though literally true | they were deceptive and utterly mislead ing i new questions bring relief it was with relief that mr rockefeller i answered a long list of questions as to his investments in railroad bonds and other phases of his personal wealth he denied tbat he had invested in practically all of | the railway systems of the country t am grateful to say that a great many i of them i did not invest in he declared lat the shout of laughter which this brought forth he asked anxiously i have i not said anything amiss mr rosenthal of the standard ou coun ! sel could not resist a dig at his old enemj and interjected i how about the great western that our i friend kefiogg is general counsel of just before the old oil magnate left the stand bis attorneys put him into the record with this careful question have you ever sought to influence any railroad through your holdings of bonds â– or stock ln the matter of freight rates or | i any rebates ff freight rates | i have not came the answer firm as to voice and accompanied by a decisive gesture some light was thrown on the vast sum which standard oil holds in wall 3treet for loan investment when interest rates are high or stock is to be manipulated mr kellogg thought this loan fund amounted to about j100.000.000 mr rockefeller smiled and said ei ce-_sive he finally put the proper figure at sk.oog.oi3o ami dee-mad his belief in shore time loans as a form of investn____at archbold appeared as a witness for the defease and for at least three dnji â€¢Â«â– j continued on 6th page 2d column j town 2 j â€”, b ul â€” if i i f **. 9 i rem cthicaujo ..*>>> 81 2.15 2 h8 1.08 u 7 38 oraa chic-mn jo ii 2.13 __.*. .,Â«_ jj - .-â– ',__-_ ,.__'.. tto 30 si 2.13 u fib 75 20 7 34 ijot park 5 81 213 _.Â» tin 78 ... t 52 â€¢___. m 81 2.15 2 iio 88 78 . 7 i lka vie _*> tu 2.13 2.80 80 1.2b . . . j hi so 81 2.13 2.00 0 8 7j f weathek forecast j wf Chicago and vicinity partiy k k\"j cloudy and slightly cooler wednes r ' _%. i day probably becoming unsettled *Â£ j \Â» i again thursday fresh westerly f â– v 1 winds becoming variable wednes ,Â«,! jm day night jq ooooooc<xxxxxcoooc)ccoooo i the reasonableness c of the examiner's plan for a c practical insurance of results to fi advertisers in its help and r situation wanted columns has c so appealed to both employer and employe that through the combined efforts of the exam c iner's situation wanted col > umns and the examiner em ? ployment exchange hundreds Â£ of people are placed monthly in ? good paying positions if you c are looking for a situation try v an ad in the examiner and re r ceive the services of the c examiner employment i 8 exchange \ 0 70 washington st ' 8 us fifth av Â£ h 776 milwaukee av Â£ ocxxjoooooccooooooooqqdoo going to give a m_____erxt_t bail aovntlm la th examiner coming eveata column â€¢ il big i argains n eusmess m ss i are to ' each day in the vi^tf e;.'3 examiner's business chance p im column l'dok it over j ju phone randolph 2500 /Â§Â£

Chicago examiner vol vi no 291 a m wednesday november 25 1908.-v-!4 pages price one cent ttbh tokio agitated by exainer's report of the kaiser's interview absorbing topic of the peo ple but officials all dep recate threats full accord with u s government organs say next few days events wiil show the emperor wrong archbishop ireland seen great prelate astonished by veiled attack on him can t speak officially tokio nov 24.â€”the Chicago exam in-jr's published interview with emperor im is the most absorbing topic of the day here officials as well as the news papers beliere the emperor has been cor rectly qnoted but the newspapers ridicule i his statements one paper publishes a picture of the german emperor having his tongue am putated and editorially discredits the state ment attributed to him that he and presi dent roosevelt bave agreed to oppose all the newspapers inspired by th op position insist that the relations be tween america and japan especially re garding china and also the open door are exceptionally friendly and that harmony is it is intimated by official organs that de velopments daring the neit few days wil prove that the cnited states and japan are fully agreed in regard to china ia spite of emperor william's statement that be president roosevelt are ln entire ac 'â– ireland wrought up but refuses comment on kaiser ind new tork nov 24.â€”archbishop tre nd to whom strong reference was made i the authentic report of the kaiser's interview -- published exclusively ln to liy's Chicago examiner arrived in this ty to-day en route from st paul minn i visit the pope at the vatican in rome one of the first things the archbishop d when he arrived at the murray hill otel where he wiil stay until he sails hursday on la provence with bishop scanlon of omaha was to buy a copy of the Chicago examiner containing the text of the imperial kaiser interview in which reference was made to him as follows the emperor declared that archbishop r_d is one of the worst enemies amer ica bas he is lireraliy a jesuit watch out for ireland he made a victim of Taft at rome prelate is wrought l'p that the archbishop was very much wrought up upon reading that part of the interview which referred to him was shown by the manner in which be read it aloud to lisbop scanlon in the lobby of the hotel ipeating each word distinctly with the copy of the examiner in his md the archbishop stood deeply en ossed for a few moments glancing over ie dispatches in which the vatican con rmed the text of the kaiser interview iblished in substance by the examiner the moment his eyes lighted on that por on of the text in which reference was ade to him he called bishop scanlon to s side listen to this bishop he exclaimed hen he read the text alond a reporter r the examiner asked for the arch shop's views what could i say asked the arch shop believe me i could say nothing i did not hear of my name being men tioned in the interview until i arrived here to-day a friend whom i met told me that it was published in the examiner i will take it to my room and read it over carefully declines to comment ithe archbishop accompanied by bishop anion then went to his room where he mid read over the dispatches relating to e kaiser interview ln quiet he re ined shortly afterward and seemed very nch impressed with the gravity of the legations as regards the holy see as to the kaiser's reference to him he id this to say although he wished it iderstood that he was making no cem ent upon the interview i do not wish to make any comment on lis at least not until i have given it ep thought the archbishop then left the hotel to ly his respects to archbishop farley the rchbishop will go directly to rome where _ will remain a guest at the vatican for vera weeks germans and austrians predict trouble for kaiser london nov 24 berlin dispatches bring the information that the rheinsch westfeulicbe zeitung commenting on the examiner interview says | despite hale's denial there must be mnch truth in it as we learn the english papers were acquainted witb the particu i lars the whole story would cause a great i ptir and like hydra to hercules will bring i mill further trouble to the berlin govern ,.[ ment j vienna wires that the zeit says i * a fearless and great newspaper such as â€¢ i the examiner wouldn't lie it is certain i the examiner correspondent succeeded in 3 getting a copy of the interview the words are ridiculous and child â– lih ' admiral's nephew and widow held as slayer harry sampson who was killed in the home of his mother-in-law near rochester n y and his widow who is charged with the shooting mrs sampson held as slayer of her husband the admiral's nephew charged with shooting young man to death in her mother's home following quarrel rochester n y xov 24 georgia allyn sampson widow of harry sampson a nephew of admiral sampson who was shot to death november 1 was arrested and charged with murder ta the first de gree at the close ot tie inquest at mace don to-day harry sampson was slain on the morn ing of november 1 on the farm of his wife's parents three miles from macedon i mrs frank p allyn mother of mrs i sampson lies critically ill at the allyn ' home which is barred to all outsiders the inqnest failed to reveal the name of the author of the mysterious letter that prompted the family quarrel which pre i ceded the tragedy the letter was de | stroyed and all that has come to light of its contents ts mrs aliyn's statement that she read it and that it was not proper for any woman to receive nor proper to retain this led ber she says to destroy the letter an hour after the shooting the finding of this letter in mrs samp son's possession en the previous saturday j by her hnsban-i caused the early morning quarrel just prior to his death | on the morning of his death sampson i ! and his wife had been in the sitting room ' of the allyn home in the kitchen was | mrs allyn following the report of a rifle mrs allyn opened the kitchen door and sampson fell dead at her feet then mrs | sampson rushed down a flight of stairs which leads from the sitting room the i rifle stood against a wall of the sitting j room the suicide theory received its greatest set-back when eir hamilton testified that it would have been impossible for samp son to have shot himself with a rifle â– **""" ' whisky samples fall into hands of children samples of liquor were distributed lib 'â– , erally through englewood yesterday and i several of the small bottles fell into tie i | bands of school children who drank the , whisky one little girl is said to bav.*>â€¢'â– â€¢"> i halsted street where nntil two weeks ago . the lli'.'f 11 lived say that mccune's be havior is traceable to a young widow who â€¢ lived in garfield boulevard and who now i is missing , mrs mecaue who was married to colonel . m oiae in 1000 declared her h7._n.-jnd ! : drove her from their home and forced her . to sign a contract of separation she says the widow was the cause the contract , ' agreement she say was that jlccune i should give his wife 000 tn cash j3 week ly for ber support and the household fur nitnre in return she agreed never to ! reside again in the boulevard block of i which he has charge \ resigns from church office the affair caused a great sensation in the big apartment buildings belonging to i the choate estate and an uprising among the tenants and neighbors so strong was the pressure that steps were taken to drive _ mccune ont of the garfield boulevard pres byterian church in which he was an elder what action was taken is not known but yesterday the rev b keene ryan pastor of the church admitted that [ mccnne had resigned further he de ' clined to discuss the matter the woman in the case is a pretty young milliner formerly employed in a department store according to mccune's friends she met the colonel several months ago she left the store and her apart ments in garfield boulevard about the , time sfe-cnne left his wife jiked cir who took poison the separation of the mccunes is the sequel to another extraordinary incident on christmas eve 1000 elsie m free man 51 carpenter street drank ehloro , form with snicidal intent tn lincoln park i because mccune had jilted her to marry elenor elsele the girl had written a pathetic note charging mccune with murdering her by marrying another woman last night the woman who won him : then was found at the home of friends on : the south side she said we had been married only a week i when the freeman girl started our trouble he had two children then by a former marriage â€” little girls then they are now ' | mrs myrtle mccomb and lucy who is i i eighteen years old â– \ we were happy i raised the girls 1 1 and took good care of them we got â– â€¢ i along until a few weeks ago and then i j that widow came into his life two weeks i ago â€” on november lo he came home and j i said there has been a whole lot of talk j j about me and this woman she is going ito get ont of the neighborhood and you j must go too i told him i didn't want to get ont and he said you've got to get a divorce i i still loves her husband 1 i didn't want any divorce then he brought home some papers and told me to 1 take them to a lawyer he insisted that i ; sign them they were drawn by attorney ' g a gary and were signed in clayton d eulette's office i didn't want to sign them for i still love my husband he said i must sign them or i shouldn't have a cent and i signed he gave me $.â– *Â» and some furniture and i get 3 a week that was all he would give he didn't have a dollar when i married him â– * i stuck to him and worked and now that ' he has money and i am lame and helpless i he leaves me i love him and i know that ' some day he will come back to me in the neighborhood it was reported that : j mccune and the widow are ia kansas city i i but his relatives said he was visiting a 1 stepbrother a t mcadow at lamar mo mrs myrtle â– mccomb his daughter is ill * and under a physician's care because of the 1 affair buys art institute lion from confidence men j german learns trick when he tries to take ornament away two conscienceless men swindled otto i schleriotb 44 schilier street halle al sace-lorraine germany out of $â€¢**) yester ! day by selling him one of the bronie lions on the portico of the art institute and failing to deliver it schierioth was ad i miring the lion when the strangers ap i proached and offered to sell it for tho he clinched the bargain eagerly but when he drove up to the institute with a two-horse wagon and a block and tackle to lift the lion down the art institute people wouldn't let him have it it was a miserable cheat said herr schierioth in reporting the matter to the Chicago avenne police just before starting back to germany if yon find chose men i wish you would make them return my money or deliver the lion f o b to halle archbold 5 defense of standard oil rebates wwere no atti i tude question i other large ship i per indeed every other large i every other consider i able states i the people who have made i outcry done for unfair i there has no reason for i man who freight i he could i go to the railroads and i bargain among them price i should be transported i to say the popular i understanding any rate i or you may i as to the i the shipper i when a manufac i a rebate i from the immediate i ly made the cost i and the consumer it i was a reduction got the benefit of it i state that as a rule that applied to my knowledge of the business in those days â€” john d aechbold on witness stand john d archbold lynch 3 as troops are rushed to jail tennessee mob hangs negroes to avenge death of dep uty sheriff tiptonville tenn nov 24 11ir1.v six weeks after the attention of tile nation had been directed to itm lawlessness in this section when captain queatin rankin was taken out and hanged by rhe night riders came the startling culmination to-day to the shooting sunday of d^rnfy sheriffs ( burrus end hall by marshall ed-ward and ! james stineback negroes when after tiie three men had been given a trial and con demned to death within a few hours after capture they were snatched from the of ficers in the courtroom nished to the edge of the town strung np an.l their bodies riddled with bullets notwithstanding the dramatic features surronndlng the lynching it was carried out in the most cold-blooded and systematic manner imaginable the negroes who had been concealing themseives in the fastnesses of an almost impenetrable canebrake near here were not captured until this morning when | they came out to secure food to pre 1 vent expected violence they were rushed | to jail the news of the capture spread rapidly and soon a mob from the surround ing country had assembled hold quick trial j fearing violence sheriff haynes com i municated with governor patterson at \ j nashville and asked that a ompany ofi i the troops who have been on duty at ! i cimip nemo ever since the rankin tragedy : ibe rushed here governor patterson or 1 dered the soldiers out and they are now marching across country to this place many of the leading citizens in view of all that has happened in the last few months appealed tearfully to the mob to ' allow the law to take its course but they i were hooted at and one speaker pulled ' ; from a box upon which be was speaking justice lee dnvis was appealed to and he opened court iate this afternoon think â– ing a hasty ttial of the negros might ap 1 pease the anger of the mob a jury was : ! secured the evidence heard and verdict ot â– guilty rendered within hardly more than ! an hour's time the negroes were con 1 demned to death lynched in street officers of the . court took the prisoners in charge and started for the jail as they ; reached the door of the courtroom there was a scuffle and before the officers real-i ized it the prisoners were taken from them | the mob then rushed the negroes down the street about â€¢*-*Â»â€¢ yards and strung theoi p volley after volley was fired into their bodies which were left hanging there all night want field museum moved to garfield park committee of west park commission ers will request change overtures are to be made to the trustees of the marshall field estate in the near future by a committee of the west park i commissioners in an effort to induce the j trustees to have the field columbian mu seum removed to one of the west side ! parks tn all probability garfield park if j the plans of the committee are successful the museum it was declared will event 1 uallj be located in the most central part of the city the decision was reached after the regular weekly meeting of the l>oard yesterday the motion was made by commissioner joseph a o'donneil and was unanimously approved by the seven members of the board kemp verdict due to-day the verdict in the hearing against the kev robert morris kemp wiil be banded to bishop charles p anderson aad made public to-day dr kemp was tried by a commission of two clergymen aad one layman on charges of misconduct made by choir boys of st chrysoatom's episcopal cburch of which im waa rector \ official tax rates for year 1908 are issued following is the table of tax rates for 1908 for Chicago divided into its towns : as officially announced by county clerk joseph haas yesterday 100-mile bicycle test for admirals but they can waik fifty miles or ride ninety if they prefer washington sor tr new berry assistant secretary of the navy as aske.i by the president has made up ten tatively the plans for the walking and riding tests of officers of the line and tag ashore and u-.-.ai mnch surprise was expressed to-day when â– the data was obtained and it was seen that i there would be no swimming exercises it was explained by some officers tbat any man in the nary would have to take the consequences if he did not know how to swim in case he fell overboat admiral dewey will be exem such rear admirals as dr p m rixey who are of the staff and not of the line al line officers from admirals down and staff officers from captains down will have to do these things walk fifty mile in three d or ride ninety miles in three ts or ride the bicycle 100 miles in th_e days au of this is of course on land at sen watch officers wiil have to stand watch for seventy-two hours captains and navigators of vessels will have to stand on continuous duty for twen ty-four hours on the b - other details are yet to be arranged pullman conductor held for smuggling j f yanner charged with operating â– at el paso tex j f yanner a pullman ear conductor employed on the Illinois central railway was arrested yesterday by special opera tive charles everstein of the government secret service on a charge of aiding and abetting the smuggling of chinamen into the united states from mea ss the border at el paso tex yanner is sus pected of aiding two chinamen to reach chieago he was arraigned before com missioner foote and in default of a bond he was taken to the county jail yanner recently was arrested on a similar barge at kansas city but was dismissed china wants roosevelt to remodel empire special cable to ths examiner tokio japan nov 2 the japan ad vertiser gives the most prominent publicity to the rumor emanating from pekln that one of the principal objects of tang shao vi's mission to the cnited states is the endeavor to indnce president roosevelt to act as confidential adviser to china during the process of remodeling the government on constitutional lines carnegie 71 years old to-day says he's young new york xov 21 seventy-one years old to-morrow is andrew carnegie and he told his friends v,-ho sent him greetings i night that he felt younger and ha-ppier 1 than at any time since he qnit hm _â– ____ j his optimistic feelings may be jndged f n>ni i his answer to the inquiry as to bow he re g-utded financial conditions ar present in this country the reply was this all's well rebates are a blessing archbold swears standard oil shared in rivals profits through draw from the railroads is proud of his re declares he sought and fought for bargains in transportation business john d ends testimony rockefeller forced to tell of contract made to restrai an independent new york nov 24 with _ sigh of relief john d rocke feller this afternoon gave up i the witness chair in the go^rnment'a suit for the dissolution of the standard oil trust he was not out of the room before in pepped john d archbold â€” known as the little king officially regis tered as first president and snoÃŸ cially since the campaign as responding secretary â€” _. rea.l and willing sacrifice for the defens the oil octopus for five days the riches car . the world has been testifyi -- - hope that the united states gout will not order his marvelous men torn to pieces part of the time he was in the hands of frank b k zg chief surgeon of the feder and all the rockefeller weal not pr3vent much vicious probing the ordeal has told on mr jc__.e feller more than he would admit and he was barely able to finish his ex amination archbold loob belligerent there was something belligerent about th general air of lieutenant archbold he bonnded down in his chair and while await ing the first question his eyes danced about the room never resting a moment he ciai-ed at mr kellogg at his own attor neys at the small army of reporters im partially his jaw was set in defiance to ' every one the better part of mr rockefeller's last â– morning on the stand was given over to ' a spirited attack on his veracity in con ; nection with an affidavit made in ebo in this affidavit mr rockefeller swore that the standard oil company of ohio did no o*wn or control certain refineries mr keilogg trotted out the secret trust agreement of is7o which gave the oil trust a new birthday and added three years to its age the refiners which mr rocke feller had denied in ar affidavit a year later were plainly included in the trust a-rreement mr rockefeller used al the known first aids to the wounded corporation witness j he forgot he could not remember he did i not recollect his attention had not been called to it thns did he dodge the sar castic and accusing shafts of the white haired man from st paul he finally declared that the facts in his : affidavit were literally true n*or would ! be admit that even though literally true | they were deceptive and utterly mislead ing i new questions bring relief it was with relief that mr rockefeller i answered a long list of questions as to his investments in railroad bonds and other phases of his personal wealth he denied tbat he had invested in practically all of | the railway systems of the country t am grateful to say that a great many i of them i did not invest in he declared lat the shout of laughter which this brought forth he asked anxiously i have i not said anything amiss mr rosenthal of the standard ou coun ! sel could not resist a dig at his old enemj and interjected i how about the great western that our i friend kefiogg is general counsel of just before the old oil magnate left the stand bis attorneys put him into the record with this careful question have you ever sought to influence any railroad through your holdings of bonds â– or stock ln the matter of freight rates or | i any rebates ff freight rates | i have not came the answer firm as to voice and accompanied by a decisive gesture some light was thrown on the vast sum which standard oil holds in wall 3treet for loan investment when interest rates are high or stock is to be manipulated mr kellogg thought this loan fund amounted to about j100.000.000 mr rockefeller smiled and said ei ce-_sive he finally put the proper figure at sk.oog.oi3o ami dee-mad his belief in shore time loans as a form of investn____at archbold appeared as a witness for the defease and for at least three dnji â€¢Â«â– j continued on 6th page 2d column j town 2 j â€”, b ul â€” if i i f **. 9 i rem cthicaujo ..*>>> 81 2.15 2 h8 1.08 u 7 38 oraa chic-mn jo ii 2.13 __.*. .,Â«_ jj - .-â– ',__-_ ,.__'.. tto 30 si 2.13 u fib 75 20 7 34 ijot park 5 81 213 _.Â» tin 78 ... t 52 â€¢___. m 81 2.15 2 iio 88 78 . 7 i lka vie _*> tu 2.13 2.80 80 1.2b . . . j hi so 81 2.13 2.00 0 8 7j f weathek forecast j wf Chicago and vicinity partiy k k\"j cloudy and slightly cooler wednes r ' _%. i day probably becoming unsettled *Â£ j \Â» i again thursday fresh westerly f â– v 1 winds becoming variable wednes ,Â«,! jm day night jq ooooooc umns and the examiner em ? ployment exchange hundreds Â£ of people are placed monthly in ? good paying positions if you c are looking for a situation try v an ad in the examiner and re r ceive the services of the c examiner employment i 8 exchange \ 0 70 washington st ' 8 us fifth av Â£ h 776 milwaukee av Â£ ocxxjoooooccooooooooqqdoo going to give a m_____erxt_t bail aovntlm la th examiner coming eveata column â€¢ il big i argains n eusmess m ss i are to ' each day in the vi^tf e;.'3 examiner's business chance p im column l'dok it over j ju phone randolph 2500 /Â§Â£